April 12, 2002
Commissioner Romanows excellent adventure
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Nunatsiaq News
The head of the Commission
on the Future of Health Care takes a three-day tour of
Iqaluit and Pangnirtung, practicing his Inuktitut, tasting country food and
deciding whats in store for Nunavut
Roy Romanow rolled through
eastern Nunavut last weekend, unleashing the trademark charm that marked his
33-year political career in Saskatchewan.
The retired NDP premier
was appointed last year by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien to head the federal
Commission on the Future of Health Care. Hes been touring the country,
listening to public concerns and getting a first-hand look at some of Canadas
aging health-care structures.
Romanow began his inaugural
visit to Nunavut on Saturday with a tour of Iqaluits Baffin Regional Hospital.
He was visibly surprised by what he called an overcrowded supply room, but he
commended hospital staff for making the best of limited resources.
On Sunday, he visited Pangnirtungs
health centre with Nunavut Health Minister Ed Picco. Romanows enthusiastic
attempts at speaking Inuktitut in both communities were met with approving nods.
"This was a reality
check and I know this has only been a taste," Romanow said. "I was
very impressed with the orderliness of the facilities, the motivation of the
staff and the community outreach."
The youthful 62-year-old
commissioner listened carefully as Madeleine Qumuartok, the president of Nunavuts
Council on the Status of Women, told of the communitys need for more accessible
diagnostic services to combat the growing cases of breast cancer, cervical cancer,
diabetes and sexually transmitted diseases. She also pointed to the costs and
the trauma of sending unilingual Inuit south for treatment.
The language issue hit
home for Romanow, who said his parents, who spoke only Ukrainian, also struggled
to be understood in the Canadian medical system.
Members of the Pangnirtung
health committee raised concerns about the need for mental health services,
as well as a womens shelter in the community. Like many other Nunavut
communities, Pangnirtung lacks facilities to provide weekly dental treatments
and regular eye care programs to residents services most southerners
take for granted.
Some participants raised
the need to incorporate Inuit traditional knowledge into health care. Teleconferencing
would reduce the cost of sending patients south, other committee members said.
"Sitting down and
talking with the people speaks louder than any of the briefs we get," Romanow
barked over the drone of the twin otters engine during the return flight
to Iqaluit.
Role of the commission
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien
appointed Romanow to head the commission on April 4, 2001 two months
after Romanow ended his 10-year tenure as Saskatchewans premier.
Recommendations from the
commission may result in changes to the Medical Care Act, also known as Medicare.
The 38-year-old act has not been revised or amended since Lester B. Pearsons
Liberal government penned it in 1964.
Romanows visit may
mean many things for many Nunavummiut as well.
Nunavut has several notable
distinctions, he said, including an extreme housing shortage, relative isolation,
rotating doctors, lack of permanent specialists and waves of short-term nurses.
As with other aboriginal people in Canada, the medical expenses of Nunavummiut
are covered by Health Canada and the commission must consider who and how best
to continue administering the funds.
Nunavut also has the dubious
distinction of having the countrys highest suicide, smoking and substance
abuse rates issues that emphasize the need for education and prevention
campaigns as well as diagnostic procedures and treatment regimes.
"I hope to set up
a model that is supple enough to take these issues into account. The big challenge
for me is to write a clear, compelling and sustainable report," he said.
Romanows Nunavut
visit marks the half-way point in the commissions 18-city, three-month
tour.
When penning his recommendations
this summer, Romanow said hell note Nunavuts unique cultural, social
and linguistic issues.
The three-day tour at times
played out like comedy routine between Romanow and Picco or Minster Ed
as the commissioner affectionately called him. During a tour of the legislative
assembly, Picco jokingly pulled a panna (caribou-bone snow knife) and pointed
it at Romanow. The two grown politicians roared at the suggestion of the lengths
to which Picco would go to get more federal dollars for health.
Ignoring a recommendation
to check out Iqaluits night life, Romanow opted to stay in his hotel room
and jot down his impressions of the eastern Arctic and prepare for a public
meeting on the future of health care, the following day.
"Ill remember
the landing in Pang, the mountains, the beauty and history of the communities
and the genuine warmth and honesty people brought to the table," he said.
During his brief stay,
Romanow sampled char at a Sunday brunch and dug into a caribou steak with wild
rice at dinner. Sporting tan slacks, blue blazer and taupe raincoat for much
of the visit, Romanow once dubbed the "golden boy" of the NDP
appeared as at home making conversation with strangers in airport lobbies
as he did meeting with health and government officials.
While in Pangnirtung, the
amateur tennis player picked up a pair of snow goggles, which he happily modeled
for the camera.
Although somewhat reluctant
to talk about his personal life, he admitted to several brushes with greatness
including riding a restricted subway with New York Senator Hillary Clinton,
wife of former U.S. president Bill Clinton, and crossing paths with movie actor
Harrison Ford.
His appointment to the
commission came as a surprise, one too good to pass up, he said.
Romanows future plans
include a possible return trip to Nunavut in the summer, plenty of tennis and
a return to public life.
"Im going to
start a band," he said with a grin.
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